Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Brownback sacrifices own dignity to preserve 'human dignity'

Posted by Casey Lyons on Tue, Jul 14, 2009 at 12:35 PM

click to enlarge thundercats.jpg

In the latest round of attacks on mermaids, minotaurs, fawns, bat boy, man bear pigs, reverse mermaids and ThunderCats, Sen. Sam Brownback has introduced the Human-Animal Hybrid Prohibition Act of 2009. Snarf, I don't know about this, Lion-O.

On his blog, Brownback wrote about the act's intent, which is to preserve the sanctity of human life by banning the competition. This issue has been of grave concern since Ancient Greece, and it's the third consecutive year that such legislation has gone to Capitol Hill. This time, Brownback and 20 of his colleagues, including John McCain, are carrying the torch.

Writes Brownback: "Creating human-animal hybrids, which permanently

alter the genetic makeup of an organism, will challenge the very

definition of what it means to be human and is a violation of human

dignity and a grave injustice."

Consider this: Last year, the Weekly World News made some shit up reported that a reverse mermaid had washed up in Galveston, Texas after Hurricane Ike swept through. Abominations of nature are obviously a big concern for Gulf Coast states (hence dual-party support for similar measures in Louisiana), but they're also a concern for the landlocked. Look, you just never know when the lusty, drunken, brawling centaurs are going to get all belligerent on us.

Tags: , , , , ,

Comments (2)

Showing 1-2 of 2

Add a comment

Dear Doc,

I think I need a horse-sized penis. Doc, can I get a horse penis? After the procedure, the Viagra can really do it's magic!

Hahahaa

report   
Posted by allen on July 14, 2009 at 1:26 PM

Interesting... since I assumed that Brownback WAS somekind of hybrid.

report   
Posted by DKC on July 14, 2009 at 12:55 PM
Subscribe to this thread:
Showing 1-2 of 2

Add a comment

Most Popular Stories

Slideshows

All contents ©2012 Kansas City Pitch LLC
All rights reserved. No part of this service may be reproduced in any form without the express written permission of Kansas City Pitch LLC,
except that an individual may download and/or forward articles via email to a reasonable number of recipients for personal, non-commercial purposes.
Website powered by Foundation